Take Action Now

Resistance is built through consistent action. Here's what you can do — today, this week, and going forward.

This Week's Priority Updated Every Monday

Immigration Enforcement — Calls Needed Now

What's happening: Congress is considering legislation that expands ICE's authority, enables mass deportations, and criminalizes humanitarian aid to immigrants. Votes are coming.

Why it matters: This would tear apart families, deport people who've lived here for decades, and make it a crime to help someone in need. Once passed, it's nearly impossible to reverse.

What to do: Call your senators and representative. Every call is logged. Every call counts. Use the script below.

Call Script — Copy & Use

"Hi, my name is [YOUR FULL NAME] and I'm a constituent calling from [YOUR CITY], zip code [YOUR ZIP CODE].

I'm calling to urge [SENATOR/REP NAME] to vote NO on legislation enabling mass deportations and criminalizing aid to immigrants.

This would:
• Enable deportations without due process
• Criminalize giving food or water to someone in need
• Separate families and traumatize children
• Waste taxpayer money on enforcement rather than solutions

I am asking [NAME] to vote NO, publicly oppose mass deportation, and support immigration reform that keeps families together.

I will be watching how [he/she/they] votes. Can you tell me their current position?"

Find Your Senators Use 5 Calls Resistbot

How to Make Calls That Actually Work

Phone calls are the single most effective way to influence an elected official. Emails get auto-replied. Tweets get ignored. Calls get logged by a real person and reported up the chain. Here's how to do it right.

  1. Find your representatives. Google "[your state] senator" and "[your city/district] representative." You need their direct office numbers — not a general contact page. senate.gov has all senators.
  2. Know the specific bill or issue. Vague concern ("I'm worried about immigration") is easy to dismiss. Naming a specific bill number and its specific harm is 10x more effective.
  3. Call during business hours. 9am–5pm local time. Morning calls are usually the least busy.
  4. Be brief and clear. You have 2–3 minutes. State your name, city, zip code, what you want, and why. Then stop talking.
  5. Be polite but firm. The staffer answering is not your enemy. But don't hedge. "I strongly urge a NO vote" is better than "I'm a little concerned."
  6. Ask for their position. "What is the Senator's current position on this bill?" If they won't answer, note that. If they give a position, note that too.
  7. Call again next week. One call is a data point. Repeated calls from the same constituent become a pattern that gets attention.

Your Weekly Action Calendar

Small, consistent actions compound. This isn't a checklist — it's a rhythm. Pick what works for your life and make it a habit.

Monday
5–10 min

Make Calls

Call your reps about this week's priority issue. Use the script above. Log who answered and what they said.

Tuesday
15–30 min

Fund the Fight

Donate to organizations doing direct work. Even $5 adds up. Bail funds, immigrant defense organizations, and mutual aid networks are chronically underfunded.

Wednesday
10–15 min

Lock Down Your Digital Life

Update one password. Enable 2FA on one account. Help a friend do the same. Digital security isn't optional for activists — it's survival.

Thursday
1–2 hrs

Show Up Locally

Attend a meeting, town hall, or community event. Local organizing is where real change happens — and it's where people are always needed.

Friday
10 min

Share & Spread

Send this week's call script, a know-your-rights guide, or a resource link to someone in your network. Information spreads through trust.

  • Share this week's priority call script
  • Send a know-your-rights card to a friend
  • Post about an action you took (if safe to do so)
Weekend
Flex

Learn, Rest, or Both

Read something deep. Attend a training. Or — equally important — rest. Burnout destroys movements. You are not a machine.

  • Read a book from the History page reading list
  • Watch a documentary or video essay
  • Do something that has nothing to do with activism

Actions by Time Available

You don't need hours. You need a plan for whatever you've actually got.

5 Minutes — Right Now
  • Call one representative. Use the script above. Name the bill. Ask their position.
  • Sign a petition from a reputable organization (ACLU, Amnesty, etc.).
  • Text Resistbot — automated outreach to your elected officials.
  • Donate $5 to a bail fund, abortion fund, or mutual aid network.
  • Share a resource link with someone who needs it.
30 Minutes — This Afternoon
  • Call 5–10 representatives about the week's priority issue. Log responses.
  • Write a letter to the editor of your local newspaper about a current issue.
  • Set up Signal and move your activist group chats there.
  • Join an online call or webinar from an organization you support.
  • Research a local mutual aid group and figure out how to plug in.
  • Set up a password manager (Bitwarden, 10 minutes, game-changing).
2+ Hours — A Real Commitment
  • Attend a protest or rally. Know your rights beforehand. Bring water. Look out for each other.
  • Volunteer at a mutual aid site — food bank, legal aid, community kitchen.
  • Take legal observer training from the National Lawyers Guild. Learn to document police conduct at protests.
  • Host a know-your-rights workshop in your community. Templates and guides are available.
  • Canvas for a candidate or ballot measure that matters to you. Door-knocking works.
  • Organize a fundraiser for organizations doing direct aid work.

Step-by-Step How-To Guides

How to Organize a Know-Your-Rights Workshop
  1. Pick your audience. Who needs this most in your community? Immigrants? Trans people? Protesters? Students? Tailor the content.
  2. Find a space. Community center, library meeting room, church hall, or even a living room. Free or cheap is fine.
  3. Get materials. The ACLU has free printable know-your-rights cards. The National Lawyers Guild has guides for specific situations.
  4. Invite a speaker if possible. A local attorney or legal observer can add credibility and answer questions you can't.
  5. Promote it. Flyers, social media, community boards, word of mouth. Two weeks of lead time is good.
  6. Run it. Keep it under 90 minutes. Q&A at the end. Collect emails (with permission) for follow-up.
  7. Follow up. Send attendees the resources discussed. Check in after any relevant events happen.
How to Start a Mutual Aid Network
  1. Identify needs in your community. Talk to neighbors. What do people actually need? Food? Rides? Childcare? Translation? Don't guess — ask.
  2. Start small. A group chat. A shared spreadsheet. A flyer on the community board. You don't need a website or a nonprofit status.
  3. Recruit 3–5 people. Not an army. A core group that meets regularly and coordinates.
  4. Set up communication. Use Signal for security. Use a shared doc for tracking who needs what and who can help.
  5. Make it reciprocal. Mutual aid is not charity. Everyone gives and everyone receives. Emphasize this from the start.
  6. Publicize locally. Flyers, local Facebook/Nextdoor, community organizations. Word of mouth is the most powerful tool.
  7. Sustain it. Meet regularly. Celebrate wins. Prevent burnout by rotating responsibilities.
How to Safely Attend a Protest
  1. Know your rights beforehand. Read the ACLU guide. You have the right to protest in public spaces. Police cannot arrest you for peaceful protest.
  2. Tell someone where you'll be. And when you expect to be back. Use Signal to coordinate with your group.
  3. Dress for it. Comfortable shoes. Water. Sun protection or rain gear. Wear clothes you don't mind losing.
  4. Memorize a lawyer's number. Write it on your arm in waterproof ink. If arrested, do not sign anything. Say: "I am exercising my First Amendment rights. I want a lawyer."
  5. Don't go alone if possible. Buddy system. Know where your buddy is at all times.
  6. Protect your phone. Police can demand to see it in some situations. Lock it. Use a VPN. Delete anything sensitive before you go.
  7. Know your exit. Know two ways out of the area. If things escalate, leave. Staying is not always the brave choice — sometimes it's the reckless one.
How to Report a Hate Crime or Incident
  1. Get to safety first. Always. Your physical safety comes before documentation.
  2. Document everything you can. Photos, videos, screenshots. Date, time, location. Names or descriptions of perpetrators if possible.
  3. File a police report. Even if you don't expect action, a report creates an official record. Keep your copy.
  4. Report to the FBI. Hate crimes are federal offenses. File at tips.fbi.gov.
  5. Contact the ADL or SPLC. They track hate incidents nationally and can provide support and context.
  6. Connect with legal help. The ACLU or local civil rights organizations may be able to assist.
  7. Take care of yourself. Hate crimes cause trauma. Reach out to support services. You are not overreacting.

Making Your Actions Count

Do

  • Be specific — name the bill, the harm, the community affected
  • Be persistent — call every week, not just once
  • Coordinate — join organized campaigns rather than going solo
  • Follow up — track responses, escalate when needed
  • Sustain yourself — rest, celebrate wins, ask for help
  • Protect your digital footprint — Signal, VPNs, password managers
  • Support organizations doing direct work — donate, volunteer, amplify

Don't

  • Be vague — "I'm concerned" gets you nowhere
  • Give up after one try — they are counting on you getting tired
  • Go alone — collective action is exponentially more powerful
  • Burn out — pace yourself. This is a marathon, not a sprint
  • Dox carelessly — get it right or don't do it. Mistakes hurt real people
  • Ignore digital security — assume you are being watched
  • Wait for someone else — if you see it, do it

Start Right Now

Pick one thing from this page. Do it today. Come back tomorrow and do another.